31 October 2008

"san diego" is german for "whale's vagina."





















did y'all realize that wilt the stilt coached the san diego conquistadors of the aba in 1973-1974? the tiny red text on that page is annoying, and the writing is bad; but wilt was originally signed to a 1-yr player/coach deal; the lakers sued him and wouldn't let him play for any team in ca besides them. but they couldn't keep him from coaching: so he gave contracts to his old laker friends, published a book, and proceeded to lead his team by periodically not showing up for games without telling anyone. and it's like, well ... 10,000 women, dude. that was his number and he aimed to hit that number. required certain sacrifices: there's game time, and then there's game time, you hear? now, you go out there, give 110 percent; leave it all on the floor. i'll catch up with you cats in pittsburgh. 1-2-3 win.


28 October 2008

(yes, five)

here's a bit of typographical goodness i came across reading a bit from jeff pearlman's boys will be boys: the glory days and party nights of the dallas cowboys dynasty  : 

Did he love snorting coke? Yes. Did he love lesbian sex shows? Yes. Did he love sleeping with two, three, four, five (yes, five) women at a time in precisely choreographed orgies? Yes. Did he love strip clubs and hookers and house calls from exotic dancers with names like Bambi and Cherry and Saucy? Yes, yes, yes.

..the topic there is michael irvin, the dallas cowboys superstar wide receiver of my high school and college days. what makes that set of lines so fun for me is how the parenthetical assurance in the middle (yes, five) is only two words, but it glues the whole thing together; adds a layer of perspective and connection and is by itself a kind of smug thing to write but, in its context, actually takes away the chance of smugness. (if you're unfamiliar with him, irvin in the 90s was...the curt cobain of football, in some very real ways: he was the best and cockiest player on the best and cockiest team of that decade. also, in some other ways, he was the 90s football version of robert downey (in the 90s, not now so much) for the reasons alluded to above, as well as being possessed of a messiah complex so blatant that kanye "even the song i wrote about jesus feels like it's mostly about me" west could take notes and learn something. (below is a short excerpt from chapter 1; i picked it up in elliott bay and had a retardedly hard time not buying it)































Chapter One

Scissors to the Neck 

You can do a lot of things in life. You can't stab a teammate with a pair of scissors.
—Kevin Smith, Cowboys cornerback

Michael Irvin knew he was screwed.

There, dangling in his right hand, was a pair of silver scissors, bits of shredded brown skin coating the tips. There, clutching his own throat, was Everett McIver, a 6-foot, 5-inch, 318-pound hulk of a man, blood oozing from the 2-inch gash in his neck. There, standing to the side, were teammates Erik Williams, Leon Lett, and Kevin Smith, slack-jawed at what they had just seen.

It was finally over. Everything was over. The Super Bowls. The Pro Bowls. The endorsements. The adulation. The dynasty.

Damn—the dynasty.

The greatest wide receiver in the history of the Dallas Cowboys—a man who had won three Super Bowls; who had appeared in five Pro Bowls; whose dazzling play and sparkling personality had earned him a devoted legion of followers—knew he would be going to prison for a long time. Two years if he was lucky. Twenty years, maximum.

Was this the first time Irvin had exercised mind-numbing judgment? Hardly. Throughout his life, the man known as The Playmaker had made a hobby of breaking the rules. As a freshman at the University of Miami fourteen years earlier, Irvin had popped a senior lineman in the head after he had stepped in front of him in a cafeteria line. In 1991, Irvin allegedly shattered the dental plate and split the lower lip of a referee whose call hedisagreed with in a charity basketball game. Twice, in 1990 and '95, Irvin had been sued by women who insisted he had fathered their children out of wedlock. In May 1993, Irvin was confronted by police after launching into a tirade when a convenience store clerk refused to sell his eighteen-year-old brother, Derrick, a bottle of wine. When Gene Upshaw visited Dallas minicamp that same month to explain an unpopular contractual agreement, Irvin greeted the NFL union chief first by screaming obscenities, then by pulling down his pants and flashing his exposed derriere.

fnbjgnbgjnbgjnbgjgjgjgnjgjgjjggj

Most famously, there was the incident in a Dallas hotel room on March 4, 1996—one day before Irvin's thirtieth birthday—when police found The Playmaker and former teammate Alfredo Roberts with two strippers, 10.3 grams of cocaine, more than an ounce of marijuana, and assorted drug paraphernalia and sex toys. Irvin—who greeted one of the on-scene officers with, "Hey, can I tell you who I am?"—later pleaded no contest to a felony drug charge and received a five-game suspension, eight hundred hours of community service, and four years' probation.

But stabbing McIver in the neck, well, this was different. Through the litany of his boneheaded acts, Irvin had never—not once—deliberately hurt a teammate. Did he love snorting coke? Yes. Did he love lesbian sex shows? Yes. Did he love sleeping with two, three, four, five (yes, five) women at a time in precisely choreographed orgies? Yes. Did he love strip clubs and hookers and house calls from exotic dancers with names like Bambi and Cherry and Saucy? Yes, yes, yes.

Was he loyal to his football team? Undeniably.

Throughout the Cowboy reign of the 1990s, which started with a laughable 1–15 season in 1989 and resulted in three Super Bowl victories in four years, no one served as a better teammate—as a better role model—than Michael Irvin. He was first to the practice field in the morning, the last to leave at night. He wore weighted pads atop his shoulders to build muscle and refused to depart the complex before catching fifty straight passes without a drop. Twelve years after the fact, an undrafted free agent quarterback named Scott Semptimphelter still recalls Irvin begging him to throw slants following practice on a 100-degree day in 1995. "In the middle of the workout Mike literally threw up on himself as he ran a route," says Semptimphelter. "Most guys would put their hands on their knees, say screw this, and call it a day. Not Michael. He got back to the spot, ran another route, and caught the ball."

That was Irvin. Determined. Driven. A 100-mph car on a 50-mph track. Chunks of vomit dripping from his jersey.

Following the lead of their star wide receiver, Cowboy players and coaches outpracticed, outhustled, out-everythinged every other team in the National Football League. Sure, the Cowboys of the 1990s were bursting with talent—from quarterback Troy Aikman and running back Emmitt Smith to defensive backs Deion Sanders and Darren Woodson—but it was an unrivaled intensity that made Dallas special. During drills, Irvin would see a teammate slack off and angrily lecture, "Don't be a fuckin' pussy! Be a fuckin' soldier! Be my soldier!" He would challenge defensive backs to rise to the highest level. "Bitch, cover me!" he'd taunt Sanders or Kevin Smith. "C'mon, bitch! C'mon, bitch! C'mon!" When the play ended he'd offer a quick pat on the rear. "Nice job, brother. Now do it again." Irvin was the No. 1 reason the Cowboys won Super Bowls in 1992, '93, and '95, and everybody on the team knew it. "The man just never stopped," says Hubbard Alexander, the Dallas wide receivers coach. "He was only about winning."

And yet, there Michael Irvin stood on July 29, 1998, staring down at a new low. The scissors. The skin. The blood. The gagging teammate. That morning a Dallas-based barber named Vinny had made the two-and-a-half-hour drive to Midwestern State University in Wichita Falls, Texas, where the team held its training camp. He set up a chair inside a first-floor room in the Cowboys' dormitory, broke out the scissors and buzzers, and chopped away, one refrigerator-sized head after another.

After a defensive back named Charlie Williams finished receiving his cut, McIver jumped into the chair. It was his turn.

Although only the most die-hard of Dallas Cowboy fans had heard of him, Everett McIver was no rookie. Not in football, and certainly not in life.

24 October 2008

corduroy pants for satan.




























on the flip-side of the same theme: bookninja linked to a dude -- the world of longmire -- who has singlehandedly taken a whole bunch of romance books, kept the art, and changed the titles. a lot of them are so funny; here are the ones that have made my day.
























21 October 2008

a fresh new take on book harassment.























a new post is up on the work blog, w/r/t the bookninja rebranding contest.

chop me down before i kill again.

i just took down a recent work-blog entry, after receiving word that it was too political, which, near as i can tell, means it mentioned politics and how they exist, sometimes baldly. so i was hastened to remove the post, chop chop. well a'ight, then, here we are:

our noble leaders, the mendacity index, and you.

The Washington Monthly put together a panel and created a nifty thing called the Mendacity Index, wherein each of our last 4 US presidents has 6 prominent, proven mendacities listed, and then is given an overall score between 0 and 5.mendacity_index_1
George W. ekes out the mendacity win, surprising no one.

For the Billy Madisons among us, “mendacity” can mean 1) a lie, plain and simple, but also 2) the tendency to lie. It’s a distinction worth making, because all our presidents lie at some points or others. ALL OF THEM. And, by making an index of it, we can get a somewhat dispassionate sense for where our presidents have chosen to employ untruths: how all of them have elected to weave mendacities–huge lies intended to justify people who’ve been blown up, as well as small, strange, inventive lies that smack of pathology–into their jobs.

Further, because jobs are a primary concern of this blog, taking a look at the lies our presidents get away with (and near-invariably they do get away with them), we can get a comparative sense of how we each, in our own jobs, stack up. (I’m not saying we all lie; we’re an exceedingly honest people (except, as it happens, for our national leaders and the people who work for them.))

Depressing? Sure it is. So let’s lighten the load. Below you’ll find the Reagan-thru-GW presidents, along with

A) a choice example from their 6 lies as featured in the Mendacity Index (which you can find in its entirety here)

B) a video clip that exemplifies each of them at their gregarious, mendacious finest.

Ronald Reagan.
phhbbbt.
At a press conference, a bored President Reagan spontaneously reprises his old role as Bullwinkle. Somewhere, future-governor Palin winks her approval.

“Killer Trees. After opining in August 1980 that “trees cause more pollution than automobiles do,” Reagan arrived at a campaign rally to find a tree decorated with this sign: ‘Chop me down before I kill again.’



George HW Bush.
boo-yah!
Anna Kournikova says, “You’re a WAY better partner than saggy Bob Dole! Bump me, Bushie!”

“Drugs in Lafayette Park. Addressing the country about the war on drugs on September 5, 1989, Bush held a plastic bag of crack cocaine before the television camera and said it had been ’seized a few days ago in a park across the street from the White House.’ In order to obtain the prop, however, undercover DEA agents had lured a teenage drug dealer from southeast D.C. to Lafayette Park. The dealer’s initial response to the request was, ‘Where the [expletive] is the White House?’”



Bill Clinton.
clinton_buddy
Buddy! We’ve talked about this! There is a time and there is a place and this is NEITHER. Oh, Buddy.

“Remembering The Iowa Caucuses. At the start of the 1996 election season, Clinton commented, ‘Since I was a little boy, I’ve heard about the Iowa caucuses.’ There were no Iowa caucuses when Clinton was a boy. They began in 1972, while Clinton was a graduate student at Oxford University.”



George W. Bush.
george_w_bush_goofy.jpg
Supercallifragilisticexpialidocious. (Even though the sound of it is something quite atrocious.)

“‘Average’ Tax Cuts. Announcing his second big tax cut package in January 2003, Bush stated that ‘These tax reductions will bring real and immediate benefits to middle-income Americans. Ninety-two million Americans will keep an average of $1,083 more of their own money.’ But because the package was tilted heavily towards the very wealthy, the average tax cut for households in the middle quintile of the income spectrum was only $217, according to the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.”




09 October 2008

RE: the lost lady shoe(s?) of hoboken

a company-wide (meaning 4 offices on 2 coasts) email awaited me this morning, saying, and i'm only lightly paraphrasing here,

To whom it may concern:

If you visited our Hoboken office in the last few months, you might have left or might know who left these lady shoes. Please advise what would you like us to do with them.

below is the ramble of response i sent to my fellow creatives.



where i come from, this kind of picture attached to this kind of email is, in some very definite kind of way, meant to be ironic (or, at the absolute minimum, postironic). but i'm trying to parse this photo through my usual lens and have run into a spot of trouble. please indulge me; anything you might have to say on the matter of the lost lady shoe(s?) of hoboken will be an enlightenment, i assure you. now, let's leave the message alone for now and start with the picture, in which we see the shoe: solitary, sensible, very shiny and yet, unavoidably, brown--it must be read for multiple meanings all by itself. it's actually a pretty proper taupe, isn’t it? one wonders if this lost lady shoe of hoboken isn't utterly the same color as the carpet it crosses daily on the way to the cubicle, and wouldn’t that be lonely; very sad. but then, next to it is the bag--and this is where things get lively again. are we not to assume that the shoe has been residing in the bag? also ... this is a little hard to make out, but it looks as if the garden of eden gourmet market's tagline is temptation in every aisle; and then the shoe is right there next to the bag, modestly shiny with its buffed-plastic veneer, yet so sensible with its non-slip rubber insets. its toe that is open but not too open. has this shoe walked through the aisles of eden's temptation, or is the shoe temptation itself?
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08 October 2008

fuck howard forever.

i just got notified of a free t-shirt, since i gave (apparently good) feedback on the design.


the design is printed on "heather gray, smooth as glass" shirts. get yours here.  

07 October 2008

that old pair of jeans.




fatboy slim put out a call for people to make videos to his song that old pair of jeans. this i found out from reading the junglesmash blog, who chose one of the fan-made videos as an example of advertising they love; i love it too. love the song; and the video's enchanting.

05 October 2008

while smoking a cigarette after turning off the seahawks game at halftime.

with every snap of the ball i
become a little
bit more like a 
dead baby. small
increments. dead
baby steps. soon
my whole sports-
fan life will have
been an abortion.


03 October 2008

the mendacity index and you.




















up on the work blog : an in-depth discussion of how american presidents without mendacity are like cornflakes without the milk. (i'm just a squirrel tryin' to get a nut.)